1. fa c e s
Breaking Barriers
Amputee Amy Palmiero-Winters takes on
Western States 100-mile Endurance Run
A
t last May’s The North Face Endurance Challenge 50-miler at Bear
Mountain, New York, 37-year-old Amy Palmiero-Winters cautiously picked
her way over the loose boulders. Stepping onto a round rock with her
right foot, she drew her other leg forward and placed the wedge of rubber
serving as her left foot atop another rock, flexing her knee as jarring forces shot up
her carbon-fiber prosthesis and through her left side.
had run a 3:16 at Boston before the acci-
dent), Palmiero-Winters crammed her
now size 4.5 foot (she was normally a size
7.5) into a tiny shoe and finished Ohio’s
Columbus Marathon in 4:05.
Over the next several years, Palmiero-
Winters endured 27 surgeries attempt-
ing to improve the fused ankle and atro-
phying foot before doctors finally sug-
gested below-the-knee amputation.
“When they initially talked about ampu-
tating it, my reaction was, ‘No! I’m a
runner. You can’t do that!’” she says.
Stepping Ahead
After conceding to the amputation in
1997, Palmiero-Winters received a pros-
thesis designed for walking. It didn’t stop
her from running, even though it felt “like
running on a stick.”
Then in 2006, she found Schaffer’s com-
pany, A Step Ahead Prosthetics, in Hicks-
ville, New York, and was fitted with a
curved, flexible carbon-fiber running pros-
thesis. With it, she started training 60 to 70
miles a week and a few months later, set a
P.R. of 3:04 at the Chicago Marathon. Since
then, she has set 12 amputee world records
from the 5K to the Ironman Triathlon.
At A Step Ahead, Palmiero-Winters
had found the supportive “family” and
can-do attitude she had been seeking.
“I was surrounded by active people with
goals, whether they had prosthetics or
not,” she says. Profoundly affected by
the company’s commitment to help cli-
ents “live life without limitations,” the
single mom quit her job as a welder and
moved with her children Carson, 6, and
Madilynn, 4, to Hicksville to become
the program director for Team A Step
Ahead, whose members of all ages pur-
sue sports—from martial arts to skiing
to rock climbing—up to an elite level.
While her accomplishments prompt
able-bodied people to rethink amputees’
capabilities, her passion lies in dem-
onstrating to fellow amputees what is
possible. “I’m just an athlete and a mom
with goals like everyone else, but I face
different obstacles,” she says. “I want to
show that amputation is not an excuse
for not doing something.”
Palmiero-Winters’ increasingly ambi-
tious goals and race results earned her an
ESPY nomination (awarded to outstand-
ing athletes by cable network ESPN) and
Runner’s World Hero of Running dis-
T r a i l r u n n e r m a g . c o m june 2010 28
by elinor fish » photo by clay mcbride
The $26,000 prosthesis’ componentry
may be state of the art, but still can’t
provide the intuitive proprioception of
a flesh-and-blood ankle joint and calf
muscles that flex and twist. “Amputees
exert far more energy because of their
missing joints,” says her prosthetist, Erik
Schaffer. “The abuse running places on
Amy’s body is mind boggling. It’s like
she’s running a race and half.”
When she registered for Bear Moun-
tain—her first trail race—the organizers
told her, “There’s no way an amputee can
do this race.” Such skepticism only ampli-
fied her determination.
And while the uneven terrain, exposed
traverses and rocky stream beds were
much harder than she’d anticipated,
Palmiero-Winters finished in 12 hours 59
minutes, nearly four hours after women’s
winner, Nikki Kimball. “She is a tough,
smart racer,” says Kimball. “And truly,
aren’t those the characteristics that make
a successful ultrarunner?”
Proving “it” could be done has been
the theme of Palmiero-Winters’s running
career, since a 1994 motorcycle acci-
dent mangled her left foot, requiring the
removal of several bones in her foot and
ankle. Anxious to resume running (she
2. f a c e s
29 june 2010 T r a i l r u n n e r m a g . c o m
tinction in 2007, she was named USATF
Runner of the Week last October, and
the Washington Post listed her among
the Runners of the Decade, along with
ultrarunner Scott Jurek and 24-time
world-record-holder, Haile Gebrselassie.
While it’s easy to measure her success
by her race results, far more impressive
is her mental toughness.
For example, last July, in California’s
Death Valley, Palmiero-Winters paced
her friend Dave Balsley during a solo
Badwater Crossing a week after the offi-
cial 135-mile Badwater Ultramarathon
had taken place. Running well despite
the 127-degree heat, she was unaware
that inside the socket, her residual limb
was literally “baking.” After 67 miles,
when she finally paused on the roadside
to address the discomfort, “We pulled
the suction liner off and my skin basical-
ly went with it,” she reported on her blog.
Palmiero-Winters continued to mile 94
before finally heading to the hospital to
have her second-and third-degree burns
treated at the hospital, some of which have
yet to heal. Nevertheless, she registered for
this July’s Badwater Ultramarathon. “Amy
has more gut and drive than anyone I’ve
met,” says Schaffer. “She has an ability to
remove pain from her mind and focus on
going forward no matter what.”
But Palmiero-Winters remains modest. “I
hurt, I bleed, I fall. I am not superhuman.
Nor am I disabled,” she says.
Unfair Advantage?
After Bear Mountain, Palmiero-Winters
competed in the remaining four Endur-
ance Challenge 50-milers, finishing as
high as fourth woman at the Madison,
Wisconsin, event. But more important
than her place, she was thrilled to score
the sub-12-hour finishing time she need-
ed to qualify for June’s Western States
100-Mile Endurance Run in California.
To prepare for Western States, last Octo-
ber, Palmiero-Winters entered her first
100-mile trail race, the Heartland Spirit of
the Prairie 100-miler in Cassoday, Kansas.
She won in 18 hours 54 minutes.
Such performances prompt some people-
to question whether the lightweight pros-
thesis gives her an advantage. “I don’t see
them running on their kneecap,” she says,
explaining that her patellar tendon, which
connects the patella to the tibia, is her left
leg’s only (and insufficient) impact-absorb-
ing mechanism apart from the carbon
fiber’s slight give.
Over the years, the stress of running
(amplified by the prosthesis, which essen-
tially acts like a tuning fork sending forces
throughout the body) has caused nagging
lower-back pain. “I come down harder on
my right side, so I started trail running to
reduce the pounding,” she says.
But her off-road ambition has pre-
sented new challenges. With her current
foot design, Palmiero-Winters must side-
step downhills because she lacks a heel.
And, as she learned at January’s Race
to the Future 24-hour ultramarathon in
Glendale, Arizona, held on a tight loop
measuring just six-tenths of a mile, the
rigid prosthetic foot doesn’t “corner”
well, further jarring her gait.
Amazingly, Palmiero-Winters complet-
ed 217 laps to cover 130.4 miles—14
miles more than the top male and 36.5
miles more than the next woman. That
head-turning victory earned her a spot
on the able-bodied U.S. national 24-hour
ultramarathon team that competed
at the world championships in Breve,
France, in May.
For the world championships and other
upcoming races, Schaffer has developed
custom prosthetics for each. In the lab,
he and her coach, Bob Otto, a professor
of human-performance sciences at Adel-
phi University, have Palmiero-Winters
run with the prototypes on a treadmill
as much as 20 to 30 miles a day to deter-
mine the most efficient designs. Her
Western States prosthesis is the heaviest
by a half pound (weighing 3.5 pounds) to
handle the forces of downhill running.
While Palmiero-Winters will always be
at a physical disadvantage, her team of
experts aim to reduce those disadvan-
tages, no matter how ambitious her goals
become. “We created the beast, now we
have to keep up with it,” says Schaffer.
And then, of course there’s her
unbreakable spirit. “Some of her com-
petition may be in better condition and
have the advantage of two limbs, but
when it comes to mental fortitude, I put
my money on Amy,” says Otto.
When asked about her goal for the
highly competitive Western States, she
responds, “At the end of the day, I have
two little kids at home who think I’m the
world’s fastest mommy. As long as I do
my best that day, that’s all I want.” ■